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ABRAXAS MODS ([personal profile] abraxasmods) wrote in [community profile] abraxaslogs2021-12-17 12:09 am

The Mission

 
The Mission

The Dimmest Day is upon us.

The champions of Thorne seek to deliver their caskets safely to the central artifact of the Singularity. Opposing them are the champions of the Free Cities and Solvunn, who are charged with intercepting as many caskets as they can and carrying them safely back to their respective factions— but each is also charged with preventing the other from doing the same.

From across Abraxas, in the dead of night, three groups of the Summoned converge on the Singularity. What they do here will have lasting effects on the world and every other beyond it.

Thorne

Pleased to see a healthy number of volunteers gathered at the Empty Throne, Ambrose allows his champions a moment to savor the vocal appreciation of the gathered crowd ringing the courtyard. Thorneans applaud and cheer, and Frederick, previously this year's Elected sacrifice, looks beyond relieved. High above, the King and Queen emerge on the Royal balcony, and without any further warning the gathered crowd breaks into song— an ancient hymn of thanksgiving that feels very awkwardly like a prayer being directed towards the Summoned themselves.

Along with black leather sling packs for carrying the caskets and a lantern each, a group of apprentices bring forth pieces of armor, enchanted rings and circlets, all of them offered as temporary loans to Thorne's champions who could use a little aid in their work. These hold simple defensive and life-preserving spells, presumably a small hoard of trinkets kept aside from the usual Dimming sacrifice: putting them on may grant added resistance to magical attack, a boost to existing magical ability, or increase an individual's speed, strength or dexterity. Once everything is distributed, Ambrose himself passes out the caskets, taking great care to hand each one over with a stern, steady stare.

Even tapping into the emergency storage of magical energy provided by an ornate reliquary placed behind the throne, it takes the efforts of all the assembled Thornean mages together to open the portal that will deliver the Summoned to the crater's edge. Ambrose explains that due to the Dimming, they won't be able to create another to bring his champions home until the sun rises— and only then if the mission to restore the Singularity is successful. Everything rests with the Summoned, now. They must not fail.

The Free Cities

Aleksander's laboratory is exactly the kind of mad scientist with access to magic take on Leonardo DaVinci's workshop you might expect. Strange, chemically powered devices bubble and tick. Doves flutter and coo anxiously in cages. A couple of ominous metal exam tables with leather restraint cuffs bolted to them have been pushed back to the walls to make room for a large contraption that looks like a cartoonish steampunk ray gun, far taller than a man, aimed at a hastily painted bullseye target on a raised metal platform. Surrounding it are strange alchemic sigils burned into the floor. It becomes clear all too soon that this is the method of transport the champions of the Free Cities will be using to get to the Singularity for their mission. This is a very tech-heavy flavor of New Magic.

Assistants usher the Summoned towards the platform and offer a range of odd hand-held devices and wearable tech for anyone who would like a little extra boost. Alongside chemically powered lanterns, the Summoned are invited to pick up energy dispersing chestplates, power-assisted boots for increased speed or spring in a step and so on— though it's fair to say Aleksander's creations do all look like they might be more in the experimental stage.

Charged using a device some of the Summoned might recognize from Alexander's holiday experiment at the Circus of the Sciences, the transporter ray is ready to deliver the Free Cities' champions to the Singularity. Set on a timer, the device will activate a second time at dawn to generate a gateway to welcome them home with their winnings. Aleksander wishes them good fortune, ensures everyone is properly situated on the platform, and with a pull of a lever sends them on their mission.

Solvunn

By the Solstice itself, a great unlit pyre topped with a strange, crude effigy of a creature resembling a bear has been built in the middle of the town, encircled by a group of seven mages in elaborate masked costumes representing elements of the landscape around them— rocks, fields, forests and streams. But Rowan, who the Summoned have been directed to report to, is not among them. He stands by a smaller fire, uncharacteristically solemn. It is time for Solvunn and its champions to receive their blessings, though as always these come with a price.

Rowan directs each of the group to step up in turn and surrender something to the flames. These sacrifices can be small, but they must belong to the person giving them up. A garment they are wearing would suffice, or even just a lock of hair, a drop of blood, a clipped fingernail. These gifts, Rowan explains, will link each of the Summoned with a blessing they can carry with them as they travel to the Singularity.

Another mage wearing an elaborate antlered headdress bestows the blessings as the Summoned give their gifts, dipping an elegant hand into the flames and drawing a strange runic sigil onto their foreheads with the ash of the ceremonial fire— and instantly, the Summoned may feel they have received increased vitality, strength, speed, enhanced visual or auditory acuity. They are handed a lantern each and instructed to stand aside as the mages ask the gods to light their path, and once all gifts are distributed, the gathered mages lift their arms and begin to chant. A fiery tendril leaps from the sacrificial fire to the main pyre itself in a crackling arc that sustains itself there in the air, forming a doorway to the edge of the Singularity’s crater. This passage of fire will remain passable in either direction until the great pyre burns down to embers.

The more perceptive of the group may catch sight of huge, formless shadows moving at the very edge of their vision as they step through the fiery arch.

The Crater

When each faction's group of champions emerge on the other side, they find themselves delivered to the closest point around the rim of the Singularity's crater to their home faction. A few miles in diameter and several feet deep, the crater is a strangely, perfectly circular depression in the desert with the towering monolith of the Singularity itself glowing faintly visible through the dark of night at its center— and unlike the last time the Summoned were brought here, they have time to catch their breath and let their eyes adjust, if they wish. Muted and diminished, the Singularity makes no attempt to draw the Summoned to itself. To approach it, they will have to walk.

Physically breaching the border of the crater makes shivers run down spines and hairs stand on end, but it seems Ambrose was right. Rather than being yanked without ceremony into the metaphysical realm of the Horizon, the Summoned are able to make their careful way over the sloping rim of the crater, where each party will be able to catch sight of lights moving in the darkness as the Summoned of other factions climb down to the arena of the crater's smoothly featureless floor.

The desert air is cold and clear in the dark of night, sound carrying easily across the distance between the three parties. Raised on its rocky plinth, the towering statue of the Singularity beckons. The Dimming reaches its nadir as the Summoned of each faction march towards inevitable conflict.


enelmord: (10)

[personal profile] enelmord 2021-12-27 10:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Her offer arrests him right there. It's plain from the twist of his eyebrows that he's considering it. What is stopping him from abandoning this mission, a cause that has nothing to do with him? From breaking rank to join an ally he already knows and trusts far above anyone in the Free Cities? But...

"I gave my word." Despite all that had shifted in his life, all in rapid succession, that's one thing that holds steady. While he may not be wholeheartedly invested in the cause of a country in which he appeared by chance only weeks ago, he takes seriously his sense of honor.

"I must bring this back," he says, lifting the casket just slightly. "Besides, won't the others in your group know that I'm not supposed to be there? They could take me for a spy." A wary edge cuts through his voice then. Maybe he's just been taken captive a few too many times, but that seems to him a plausible outcome if he crosses the line.
shadowthief: (Implore)

[personal profile] shadowthief 2021-12-30 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)
She can see the debate playing out rather plainly across his face, and she wonders if maybe it's enough. Just the ask of it. The familiar face.

But something in her practically deflates at his answer, "Of course you did." A soft, slightly bitter, huff of a sound escapes as she shakes her head. "You are an honorable man... it is one of your better qualities."

Her lips press in a hard line at that point. Yes, of course. They would know he wasn't part of the group, and it would be all too easy to leap from stranger to spy, and what pull does she have with these people to make a difference based solely on her own word? "Stop being right, Matthias. It's annoying."
enelmord: (11)

[personal profile] enelmord 2022-01-05 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
His eyebrows knit together in an apologetic sort of way. After the lonely weeks he's passed in Cadens, trying to find a sense of normalcy in routine when there's nothing familiar to grasp, he can't fault her eagerness to team up. At least she understands his reluctance. Matthias has always regarded Inej as the most practical of the ragtag family he found in Ketterdam.

"I wish I wasn't," he says with a bitter edge in his voice. "But maybe we could find a way to communicate with each other. We could keep each other updated on what's happening in our respective countries."

Or, you know, personal thoughts and feelings. Like friends might do. But he's much less adept at that.
shadowthief: (Searching)

[personal profile] shadowthief 2022-01-18 05:01 pm (UTC)(link)
She nods, it's not the worst plan. Something about divide and conquer does work, sometimes, and perhaps it isn't the worst to have different people in different factions to decide how best to move forward. Perhaps one or the other of them isn't what they seem, and they can find a way to each other again if either of them feels the need to leave.

"There's something– a Horizon... they say we can access it. Perhaps through it, we could... stay in touch." She still hates the idea of going back alone, knowing one of her people is in another city altogether. How is it fair that this is how they found each other, with no feasible way to go somewhere together?